WritAfrica

Wee! The Voters.

‘Kura yako, sauti yako

Choose your own leader through your vote’

This was the banging echo

That brought us out of these village houses

For I remember that fateful day like it was a song half sunged.

The sun was hot

Dust stubborn on how feet like plastered glue

And my hope, hanging by a thread called “next time.”

For I thought that voting was for the old

The ones who still believe politicians do change lives

But that morning 

I understood the essence of registering to this database

For the teachings I heard 

Was mind moving

And a true force for my generation 

For they were teaching about voter registration at the chief’s camp.

Then the lines were formed

Longer than the sermons we hear every election season

Faces tired from exhaustion 

But ready to endure for the course ahead

With determination from the youths my age

Clutching IDs like they were tickets to a better KENYA

Coz they truly were.

Then the click happened

Coz something in me paused

Thinking of all the complaints I posted online

Hashtagging problems with no solutions 

Talking of corrupt politicians

Yet I had my ticket in hand 

To right a percentage of these wrongs

To provide a solution like…

Youths unemployed

And on ‘how the country is finished’

Yet I had never registered to vote

With other millions youths like me

Making part of the loudest ghosts

Present in anger, but absent in action.

So I made a decision

One step at a time 

Then took another

With the sun burning up high

But a thought for change

Cooling up our doubtful minds.

Mama baby infront of me

Saying she was registering “for her baby”

With mzee behind me whispering…

“Wewe kijana, hii ndio silaha yako, si pang’ang’a, si maneno tupu, NI KURA YAKO”.

With these words strucking my tired heart like a gospel of sweet hymns.

And when my turn came 

The IEBC officer who was the VAR

Looked up and smiled, ” First time, yeah?”

And I nodded reciprocating her warm gesture

As she handed me a form

A simple paper in hand 

Yet with heavy history.

Then I realised as I wrote my name

That this was more than ink

Coz it was a declaration, a binding one

That I do exist, I Matter and I refuse to watch from the sidelines

While others decide my tomorrow. 

And when they stamped my card with my regional details on it

I felt like I had just signed a promise

Not to the political reign but to myself

Because being a VOTER is not about shouting change

But about showing up

Casting my vote while counting myself

Before someone else counts me out.

And when people complain

I keenly listen 

But ask, ” Uliandika Kura?”

Coz power doesn’t sit in state house

It starts at that desk

Under the IEBC tent

Where names meet responsibilities.

LOUREEN ALMA

Changing the mindset

Tags:

No tags assigned to this post.

Related Posts

Top Categories

Trending News

COMMUNITY EFFORTS VS CRIME
WHERE WATER PASSES
COMMUNITY GROWTH THROUGH SOCIAL HALLS
PASSPORTS IN A FLASH
The Habit of our leaders
Stop GBV

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Join our vibrant community of young poets, writers, and illustrators.